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Jordan Keil inquest: A father's fear, praise for police and questions for mental health workers

Jordan Keil inquest: A father's fear, praise for police and questions for mental health workers

NZ Heralda day ago
An inquest into his death is being held with Mike Keil's and Thorpe's evidence recounting their son's unexpected slide into mental breakdown, as he suffered delusions and paranoia after a perfect family summer holiday.
Increasing distress on Jordan's part led to Thorpe taking Jordan to Auckland Hospital on January 31, 2022, in search of help.
With no mental health beds available, he was discharged to his parents' care but fled into the hospital carpark and was later found by police on a bridge where he said he was preparing to jump.
That led to Jordan being placed under compulsory mental health care on the basis of substance abuse - a finding his parents have challenged, saying medical workers misconstrued three recreational uses of MDMA into a serious drug problem.
Back at Auckland Hospital, Jordan was collected by two nurses in a car for the trip to Middlemore Hospital - a transport plan his parents greeted with scepticism. They feared the two lightly built women could not restrain their athletic son.
Jordan Kiel, 25, with his dad, Mike, in the background holding the box containing his ashes. Jordan was found dead in 2022 at the mental health unit where he was taken for treatment. Photo / Michael Craig
Mike described how he and Thorpe later found the car at the roadside on the Southern Motorway. He said the nurses explained Jordan's absence as a result of their son throwing himself out the rear window from the back seat where he had been seated alone.
From there, Jordan made his way to the Sylvia Park shopping mall carpark and was found by police about 10pm on the fifth level, outside the safety barrier and threatening to jump.
The eight-hour stand-off
Mike then described the exacting and painful eight hours that followed before Jordan came down to hug his parents.
In doing so, he praised police for their compassion and efforts over the traumatising period as they waited nearby but just out of sight so as not to be exposed to the potential horror of seeing him jump.
'I could hardly contain my emotions. I stood there all night with Debbie beside me in support. I prayed for Jordan to come down to safety.
'We both thought we would have a heart attack from the immense state of desperation and fear we might lose our boy.'
Mike said police set up an area around Jordan's location and, to their relief, one motorway police officer with experience in negotiations began talking to the young man while the formal negotiation experts raced to the car park.
He spoke of the care and support shown by the police constable who acted as liaison to the negotiators, and how they arranged the recording of video messages from himself and Thorpe to show their son.
'I said I loved him and not to harm himself and to trust the police and the people at the hospital because they were there to help him.'
Jordan Keil, 25, who died in February 2022.
Hours after the negotiators began speaking with Jordan, his parents were told their son wanted to speak with his father.
In a moment showing the knife-edge on which his son's life rested, Mike spoke of how the call was cut off just after it came through 'and I felt desperate that I had lost my chance to help Jordan come down'.
In desperation, Mike urgently phoned back 'but the call failed' and he searched for police to let someone know. It was then the police constable told of how the negotiator had disconnected the call because of a 'gut feeling Jordan wanted to say goodbye to me before jumping'.
'My heart dropped when I heard this. We had come so close to losing our boy again.'
Just before dawn, police drew back from the carpark in the hope Jordan would come down by himself. He didn't, climbing another level higher.
When a constable told him, 'Your son is strong', Mike Keil reflected on that and how it had been seven hours since his son had stood on a ledge, holding on to a guardrail.
Just before 6am, Mike was told to 'move my ute just inside the police cordon near where Jordan was threatening to jump'. He parked where police asked and moved to stand at the back of the ute.
'I couldn't bear the thought of Jordan dying and broke down and cried.'
Not long after, Mike found 'my heart lifted with a great sense of relief' after he and Thorpe were told Jordan was coming down.
How serious was it?
The relevance of the events, Mike said, was that the entire sequence from leaping out of the speeding car to the eight hours on the car park building were classified as 'moderate', not serious, by health workers.
'The nurses' incident report stated that the incident was only a minute and that it was of a moderate level. That description does not describe what occurred,' he told the inquest.
'The incident report is completely fabricated and did not describe the event at all.'
He said the official record was completed by a nurse who was not present at either the leap from the car or the shopping mall stand-off.
A haka outside the Auckland District Court at the beginning of Jordan Kiel's inquest. Photo / Michael Craig
'I am very concerned Jordan's risk was minimised by the hospital staff and, sadly, the minimisation meant the treatment plan was inadequate.'
He said police treated their son with 'dignity and respect' and 'should be commended for their efforts' whereas 'the nurses left the scene of the motorway and failed to properly report the incident with the severe adverse effect'.
Mike said it was the 'first of many indignities' his son 'was to suffer from Tiaho Mai' until his escape from the unit on February 7 and the discovery of his body five metres from the building in which he was meant to be kept securely.
Mike's evidence followed that of Thorpe's, and, like her testimony, he said Jordan had been wrongly diagnosed as a substance abuser which had led to him being treated in an inappropriate way.
The diagnosis Mike believed was wrong was in part based on medical notes that recorded Jordan Keil as saying he had used MDMA - an illegal empathogen - on a daily basis in the weeks leading up to his admission with delusions and paranoia.
In contrast, whanau and friends of Jordan said he had used the drug only three times with one of those a week before his admission.
Mike said one of the hopes he had for the inquest was to restore his son's 'mana and good memory' by correcting the 'false impression and many errors' that led to him being 'profiled' as suffering 'psychosis secondary to substance abuse'.
'Jordan was not suffering any addictions and certainly was not heavily into drugs and alcohol as had been grossly exaggerated in the hospital's forms and notes.'
Jordan Keil, 25, who died in February 2022.
Mike detailed other criticisms of Jordan's care and the treatment of the family, including an absence of a te ao Māori lens on admission and care and a lack of tikanga, the access to whanau support was wrongly restricted.
He said medical notes recording care and observation of Jordan were absent or flawed and that a comment reflecting risk appeared to have been edited out of his treatment plan on the day he died.
Keil said in one conversation while his son was in care, he was asked if 'he had what my father did' - a diagnosis of paranoid schizophrenia that was later revealed in cross-examination by the hospital's lawyer, Paul White.
'I said he was getting the help he needed to work out what was causing his illness and trust his doctors to make him better.'
Jordan was found dead five days later by Thorpe, who called Mike to break the news.
He said: 'The loss of Jordan is so overwhelming ... because he should not be dead. If only the people in Tiaho Mai had just done their jobs our boy would be with us now.'
David Fisher is based in Northland and has worked as a journalist for more than 30 years, winning multiple journalism awards including being twice named Reporter of the Year and being selected as one of a small number of Wolfson Press Fellows to Wolfson College, Cambridge. He joined the Herald in 2004.
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Sign up to The Daily H, a free newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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Thorpe said two slightly built female nurses then turned up in a sedan to drive him to Tiaho Mai, leading to her voicing concerns over what she considered an inadequate escort for her athletic and distressed son. Thorpe and her son's father, Mike Keil, who had come to help search for their son, set out to follow their son to Middlemore Hospital. Jordan Keil's second escape She alleged the car sped away and that her fears were realised when they came across the nurses' sedan stopped on the motorway near Sylvia Park. They discovered Jordan had climbed out of the moving car and had again gone on the run. What followed was eight hours of horror with Jordan atop the Sylvia Park car park building, saying he would jump. Mike Keil and Thorpe stayed and waited, and she told the court how grateful she and her former partner were for police efforts in convincing their son to come down. 'It was like a horrifying movie unfolding,' said Thorpe. 'I felt like I was going to throw up. My chest was pounding. I thought I was going to die due to the stress I was experiencing.' Afterwards, Jordan, with injuries sustained bailing out of the car, was taken with a police escort to the secure mental health unit. Jordan Keil, 25, who died in February 2022. Once there, her concerns only increased, she said. There was no expression of tikanga Māori and no accommodation for whanau to stay even though Covid-19 restrictions at the nearby Middlemore Hospital were more permissive, she said. The assumption of drug abuse was later revealed with notes suggesting mental health staff considered she might have smuggled 'concealed substances' to her son. It was 'insulting', she said: 'I am a loving mother, a school teacher and a law-abiding citizen.' 'Most devastating thing' The poor treatment, she said, extended to after Jordan's death when the hospital did not make contact until the family had a lawyer to send a letter. That led to a meeting at which, she said, the hospital kaumatua 'kept dozing off'. She claimed at one stage, he said: 'I don't know what I'm doing here. It has happened before and will happen again.' She said her 'heart breaks' to think of Jordan's eight days at Tiaho Mai. She alleged issues with the medical notes, the diagnosis and even confusion over which room her son had been kept in. The inquest also heard that Jordan escaped from the secure unit that night using a spoon to open a broken window. 'Jordan's death has had a catastrophic impact on all our lives. Losing a child must be the most devastating thing that can happen to a parent.' David Fisher is based in Northland and has worked as a journalist for more than 30 years, winning multiple journalism awards including being twice named Reporter of the Year and being selected as one of a small number of Wolfson Press Fellows to Wolfson College, Cambridge. He joined the Herald in 2004. Sign up to The Daily H, a free newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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